I’ve just put together a collection of 65 of my writings on single life in a book called The Best of Single Life. I think these are some of my most empowering articles, making a strong positive and utterly undefensive case for single life as the good life. In the book, I explain what I think is best about single life, for those who are as enthusiastic about living single as I am, as well as for those who do not want to stay single, but do want to live their single lives to the fullest while they are single.

The Best of Single Life is available in paperback here and here, and as an ebook here. The book includes 8 sections:

Why Singles Are Thriving – Despite All You’ve Heard to the Contrary

Single Life: We Chose It

Mocking Those ‘Why Are You Single’ Lists

The Good Life and the Successful Life

Savoring Our Solitude: Choosing to Spend Time Alone

Valuing Our Relationships: Choosing to Spend Time with Others

Sex and the Single Person: Have It Your Way – or Just Skip It

Are We Missing Out by Being Single – or Are They?

Here’s a sampling of some of the 65 articles in the collection:

7 secrets of successful single people

Who wrote the book of love? Happy single people

Fear not: The advantages of people unafraid to be single

Are single people more resilient than everyone else?

Why aren’t married people any happier than singles? A Nobel Prize winner’s answer

Wedding porn doesn’t turn us on: Age at first marriage has never been higher

The last ‘why are you single’ list you will ever need

Elements of the good life: Our list is too short

Sweet solitude: The benefits it brings and the special strengths of the people who enjoy it

The happy loner

Best things about living alone – for people who mean it

Single, no children: Who’s your family?

If you are single, will you grow old alone? Results from 6 nations

Who keeps siblings together when they become adults?

Bigger, broader meanings of love and romance

Getting married and getting sex (or not)

Asexuals: Who are they and why are they important?

Are monogamous relationships really better?

23 ways singles are better

What you miss by doing what everyone else does

Top 8 reasons not to marry

Keeping marriage alive with affairs, asexuality, polyamory, and living apart

Questions about singles in the workplace are coming up more and more often. That’s a good thing. For too long, conversations about the workplace, and about achieving “balance,” have focused on people who are married with children.

Here, I have put together a collection of links to various discussions (mostly mine) of singles in the workplace. There are four sections: two on the issues facing singles in the workplace, one on single people’s values, and one on possible actions that can be taken to create better workplaces for single people.

Sitting in my favorite chair, sipping a cup of dark roast, I realized my 59th birthday is three months away. After a moment of terror, I fell into thinking about my life so far and where 58 years has “brought” me: I am approaching 60, was laid-off 6 months ago, I’m unattached, and starting my fifth career. The only constant in my life I could come up with, the one thread tying the patchwork pieces together, is depression.

“Wow,” I said to my cats, “the pinnacle of almost six decades of living! I never could have imagined.” Then, I did what anyone in this situation would do, I laughed. I don’t know what else to do with life sometimes. Besides, though my pinnacle of achievement is not as stupendous as I thought it would be by now, I’m happy (when I’m not depressed).